Vanillasludge posted a photo:

Famous Blue Dumpster. Apologies to Leonard Cohen

Well It's Just That I've Been Losing So Long

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Well It's Just That I've Been Losing So Long

Jump Right In and Swim Until You're Free

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Jump Right In and Swim Until You're Free

Nothing Wrong

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Nothing Wrong

Found Slide

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Found Slide

date stamped on slide, July 1983

Found Photograph

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Found Photograph

About New York

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

About New York

Want to Be Friends?

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Want to Be Friends?

Multiverse

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Multiverse

Eagle Rock

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Eagle Rock

Hanging Out With Your Sea Lion Friends

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Hanging Out With Your Sea Lion Friends

Lost Hope

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Lost Hope

Newtown, Bucks County, PA, 2025

s t a r e

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s t a r e

Slashdot

News for nerds, stuff that matters

DuckDuckGo's Browser Now Blocks Most YouTube Ads

Nerds.xyz reports:


DuckDuckGo just gave its browser a feature that a lot of people have been waiting for. The privacy-focused browser can now block most video ads on YouTube, letting users watch videos without sitting through the pre-roll and mid-roll interruptions that have become part of everyday life on the platform. The feature is already enabled by default for iPhone, Windows, and Mac users running the latest version of the browser. Android users can turn it on manually... with DuckDuckGo planning to enable it by default in a future update...

To make it work, DuckDuckGo relies on the same community-maintained filter lists used by uBlock Origin, along with some of its own compatibility rules. The company says you might notice a bit of extra buffering before a video starts, but once playback begins, most ads should be gone.

Slashdot reader BrianFagioli argues that the feature raises questions about how creators are compensated when ad revenue is bypassed.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Orbital Datacenter Plans Need an Environmental Review, FCC Told

Environmental groups want America's FCC "to slam the brakes on orbital datacenters," writes The Register.
They're arguing for an environmental impact assessment for what could be 1 million satellites:

Earthjustice, acting on behalf of DarkSky International, Environment America, and Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER), filed a petition this week... The filing doesn't target any single company. Instead, it asks the regulator to put the entire emerging orbital datacenter sector on hold while it assesses the cumulative effects of proposals from SpaceX, Starcloud, Blue Origin, Cowboy Space, and any similar applications that follow. According to the petition, those proposals collectively seek "well over a million datacenter satellites" in low Earth orbit.... " increasing the existing volume of satellites in low-earth orbit by multiple orders of magnitude."

The groups argue that the FCC is trying to apply licensing rules written for much smaller satellite constellations to an entirely new class of infrastructure. "If ever a situation warranted a Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement [PEIS], it is this one," the petition says. It argues that a single review would allow the agency to examine "the risks, alternatives, needs, costs, and impacts of this sudden transformation of Earth's exosphere" before deciding whether any of the projects are in the public interest. The petition raises concerns about rocket launch emissions, pollutants released as satellites burn up during atmospheric reentry, depletion of the ozone layer, orbital debris, light pollution, impacts on wildlife, and interference with astronomy.

It also argues that the combined effects of these constellations cannot be understood by evaluating applications one at a time.... "It is difficult to imagine a better example of multiple projects presenting essentially identical impacts and risks that compound synergistically and cumulatively than the present proposals..." The petition argues that the FCC's current approach, which generally treats satellite licenses as categorically excluded from detailed environmental review, is no longer fit for proposals measured not in dozens or thousands of spacecraft but in hundreds of thousands and, potentially, millions.
If the FCC agrees, orbital datacenter operators will have a mountain of paperwork to clear before sending their hardware skyward.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

This Factory Was Severely Short On Workers. Then It Offered Flexible Work.

"Flexible, app-based scheduling lets large pools of part-time workers choose four-hour shifts and even select the type of work they prefer," writes long-time Slashdot reader Tony Isaac. While the system started during the pandemic when factories faced severe labor shortages, the model is now "supplying hundreds of trained workers each week... while giving people — from retirees to sidejob hustlers to longtime employees — control over their hours."

NPR says it's attracting "people who may not be seeking a traditional career in the industry or even a 40-hour workweek,"
It's a change that manufacturers including Stanley Black & Decker and Georgia-Pacific are embracing... Today, in any given week, about 450 flexible workers — roughly half the pool — pick up shifts at the [GE Appliances] plant, with workers putting in an average of 24 hours a week. Their contributions have been key to GE Appliances' $180 million expansion of the Georgia plant, completed last year, which added 600 new jobs... [Darcy Duvall, the plant's director of human resources operations] has also come to see that many workers prize flexibility despite the significant trade-offs — like lower pay and almost no benefits. MyWorkChoice employees can opt into their own group healthcare plan, but few do... The flexible work option has also helped GE Appliances keep longtime employees with decades of experience on the job.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

China's AI Companies May Be 'Distilling' America's AI Models

In March, Anthropic's Claude "quietly deployed software to spy on China-based customers," reports the Washington Post — apparently to unmask Chinese rivals "suspected of hijacking its technology to make their own AI tools smarter."

Last week Anthropic removed the spyware "after a software developer revealed its existence and privacy advocates criticized Anthropic, saying it had surveilled its own users."

Anthropic's tracking code was designed in part to catch Chinese firms "distilling" its AI models, a technique that involves pressing a large, expensive AI system to serve as a tutor to a smaller, cheaper one. Asking the larger system huge numbers of questions — hundreds of thousands or more — generates responses that can be used to upgrade the power of the smaller one on the cheap. Distillation isn't illegal, and it has been used for years in the AI industry. But distillation without permission is against AI companies' rules, and, used effectively, is giving Chinese AI companies a major leg up, American AI companies say... Anthropic and ChatGPT-maker OpenAI have both accused Chinese AI companies of using this technique to build copycat AI models of their own.

In a May blog post, Anthropic said that Chinese companies' use of distillation, along with evading U.S. export controls on high-end computer chips, has allowed them to "trail closely" behind U.S. models. But if these techniques can be blocked, it might be possible for the United States to "lock in a 12-24 month lead" on Chinese capabilities, the company said... This month, Anthropic said in a letter to U.S. senators that was obtained by The Post that it uncovered a campaign in which Chinese tech giant Alibaba's Qwen AI team used roughly 25,000 fraudulent accounts to generate more than 28.8 million exchanges with Claude to improve its own technology. In February, Anthropic made similar accusations against the Chinese firms Deepseek, Moonshot and MiniMax and said the campaigns were "growing in intensity and sophistication...." Anthropic and OpenAI have appealed to the U.S. government, arguing that distillation amounts to intellectual property theft that harms the U.S. in the geopolitical AI contest....

That Chinese AI labs are using U.S. models to improve their own technology appears beyond dispute. In a February 2025 study, researchers from China's Peking University and the state-funded Chinese Academy of Sciences developed methods to detect signs of distillation in leading large language models. They concluded that, with the exception of ByteDance's Doubao, most domestic models they tested showed substantial evidence of distillation, mostly drawing from U.S. models... In one set of intensive tests, a Qwen model misidentified itself as Claude nearly a third of the time, the Chinese researchers found.

U.S. firms have also used distillation to piggyback on AI systems made by others. In 2024, OpenAI released a tool to make it easier for customers to distill its own models and produce data sets for AI training. SpaceX founder Elon Musk said in court testimony in May that his AI company xAI used distillation to train its models and that the technique is common throughout the industry.

The article also notes that Anthropic "said it has banned nearly 700,000 accounts that were using Claude in China." But the article includes this quote from Kyle Chan, a fellow at the Washington-based Brookings Institution's China Center. "Anthropic's framing is that this is a geopolitical contest for basically the future of the world and freedom and democracy. It's that this is not just undercutting the U.S. commercially, but undercutting American strategic advantage in the most powerful technology we know today."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Andreas Gohr: Weblog [splitbrain.org]

Weblog on technology, programming and personal stuff by Andreas Gohr.

Home Assistant Transplant

Home Assistant Transplant

I have been running Home Assistant on a Raspberry Pi 4 for about five years now. A short while ago, homeassistant was suddenly no longer responding. Neither web ui nor a SSH login worked. So I cut the RPi's power and rebooted it. That seemed to have fixed it and I didn't think about it.

The old Raspberry Pi4

Then this weekend I wanted to update Home Assistant and create a backup as usual beforehand. But somehow this backup always failed with

failed to perform the action update/install. Error creating backup: Backup failed: [{'type': 'HomeAssistantBackupError', 'message': “Preparing backup of Home Assistant Core failed. Failed to inform HA Core: Unsuccessful websocket message - {'id': 232, 'type': 'result', 'success': False, 'error': {'code': 'pre_backup_actions_failed', 'message': 'Error during pre-backup: Could not lock database within 30 seconds.'}}.”, 'stage': 'home_assistant', 'error_key': None, 'extra_fields': None}]

Looking at the logs I saw

The system could not validate that the sqlite3 database at //config/home-assistant_v2.db was shutdown cleanly

Apparantly my sudden reboot had corrupted one of the sqlite databases.

I tried to follow this blog post to recover the database but it didn't work. Home Assistant did not like the restored version.

So my only chance was to restore the database from a backup. Unfortunately the same issue had also influenced the automatic backups. The latest usable one was from 28th of June. So about two weeks of historical sensor data is lost.

Since I hade to restore a backup anyway. I decided to do what I had planned for a long time: move HA off the Raspberry and thus an SD card, to a “proper” system with a SSD.

I still had an old Celeron 3855U based Mini-PC, that I had used a home lab Docker server until I set up my new NAS. It has 32gigs of RAM and a 500GB SSD – more than enough for Home Assistant.

Shuttle MiniPC

I followed the official guide to set up Home Assistant OS from a Ubuntu Live image. To avoid having to connect a monitor and peripherals during setup, I used my Nano KVM - worked like a charm.

Nano KVM

The rest was pleasantly simple. Once Home Assistant is up, you simply upload the backup during the onboarding phase – it takes a while to restore and then your Home Assistant is up and running as usual. The only thing I had to change, was the IP address (that made all my external integrations like MQTT and Grott work again) and switch the (no longer existing) RPi bluetooth adapter for the builtin one of the MiniPC.

I am glad my Home Assistant is working again. It has become an indespensible part of how my home works.

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Kaarten voor de Zwarte Cross uitdelen in het StamCafé

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De roeiende Noren & doorgesnoven Argentijnen laten we vanavond maar even in hun sop gaarcoken en dan aandacht voor het volgende: het leukste, gezelligste, raarste en ruigste festival van Nederland KEERT TERUG. We voelen ons als importknuppels in de Randstad zó thuis in het Verre Oosten dat we sinds jaar en dag rondhobbelen op de Zwarte Cross - vroeger nog gewoon als bezoeker met afgeragde vouwwagen toen de Jovinks vermomd als de Ayatollahs met gruizige knettergekrock de katse campingtent afbraken, later (nu) ook als corporate mediadinges. Tom Staal gaat tegenwoordig streamend, lullend, kletsend en crossend over dat terrein EN JULLIE KUNNEN MEE! Wat is er nou leuker om zélf te zien hoe stuntmannen zichzelf óver de Megatent laten katapulteren, een bult bier te drinken op rare plekken, te rammen bij de Dropkick Murphys, te rocken bij Eli 'Paperboy' Reed (later deze week: Mosterds Muziektips), te rauzen bij Bökkers en natuurlijk allerlei krankzinnige creaties over de crossbaan te zien stuiven? Helemaal niks! Wij van GeenStijl geven een zooi gratis & voor niks Zwarte Cross-weekendtickets (+camping) in setjes van 2 weg. Enige voorwaarde: je moet GeenStijl Premium zijn en als je dat niet bent kun je dat HIERRRR worden. Slechts een paar euro per maand dus je kunt het ook rustig een maandje proberen. Wil jij 2 weekendtickets voor de Zwarte Cross? Mail effe je username naar michiel@geenstijl.nl en onze Paarse Broek neemt contact met je op - bij veel animo gaan we loten. En onthoud: gang is alles!

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Dit was vorig jaar

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If ludicrous Trump flattery can save NATO, bring it on

The NATO chief Mark Rutte is quite annoying. It is in a worthy cause.